Quick answer
To protect a security deposit at move-out in NYC, clean to the standard a landlord or management company actually checks at final walkthrough: inside every cabinet and drawer, inside the oven, refrigerator and freezer (including gaskets), all appliance exteriors, bathroom fixtures and grout, every floor, baseboards, window sills and tracks, closet interiors, and light fixtures — not just a surface-level tidy of an already-lived-in apartment.
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The short answer
A NYC landlord’s move-out walkthrough checks a more detailed standard than everyday cleaning — appliance and cabinet interiors, bathroom grout, floors, baseboards, window tracks, closets and light fixtures. Matching that specific checklist, not just tidying an already-lived-in apartment, is what actually protects a security deposit.
Why “clean” isn’t the same as “move-out clean”
Everyday apartment cleaning maintains a baseline: counters wiped, floors vacuumed, surfaces dusted. A move-out clean is a different, more thorough standard because it’s being checked against a specific list by someone whose job is deciding whether to return your deposit in full. The two most commonly missed categories are appliance interiors (the inside of an oven or a refrigerator rarely gets detailed during normal occupancy) and the “forgotten” surfaces — baseboards, window tracks, tops of cabinets, closet shelving — that a standard cleaning routine skips for months at a time.
The checklist, room by room
Kitchen
- Inside the oven, including racks
- Inside the refrigerator and freezer, including door gaskets and shelving
- Cabinet interiors and exteriors, and the tops of upper cabinets
- Behind the stove and refrigerator (where they can be safely moved)
- Range hood, interior and exterior
- Countertops, backsplash, and sink
Bathroom
- Grout lines, scrubbed, not just surface-wiped
- Fixtures descaled (faucets, showerhead)
- Exhaust fan cover
- Behind and around the toilet base
- Medicine cabinet interior, if present
Whole apartment
- All floors, vacuumed and mopped
- Baseboards along every wall
- Window sills and tracks
- Closet interiors and shelving
- Light fixtures and switch plates
- Interior doors and door frames
Why this matters more once the apartment is empty
A move-out clean is genuinely easier to do thoroughly once furniture and belongings are gone — nothing blocks access to floors, baseboards, or the interior of closets. If your move happens on the same day the walkthrough is scheduled, coordinating a cleaning visit for right after the last item leaves (rather than trying to clean around remaining boxes) gets a materially better result against the actual checklist a landlord uses.
Timing in a city that turns over on the first of the month
NYC leases disproportionately end and begin on the first of the month, which means move-out cleaning demand — whether you’re doing it yourself or booking a service — spikes hard in the final days of every month. If you’re booking professional help, earlier is better; if you’re doing it yourself, blocking out real time (this is a multi-hour job for a full apartment, not a quick pass) before the final walkthrough avoids a rushed result on moving day itself.